Western Mail

Unions step up demands for NHS workers’ pay rise

- ALAN JONES newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

THE UK Government is being warned that a long-awaited pay rise for NHS staff will be an “insult” if it is only a slight increase on the 1% the Prime Minister has said is all that can be afforded.

Health unions are stepping up pressure for an end to the delay in giving nurses and other staff a wage increase amid speculatio­n that an announceme­nt could be made in the next few days, possibly of a 3% increase.

The UK Government sparked anger by saying earlier this year it could only afford a 1% increase despite the extraordin­ary efforts of NHS staff to deal with the pandemic.

The NHS Pay Review Body made its recommenda­tion weeks ago, leaving unions to question why a pay rise is still being delayed.

A Royal College of Nursing spokesman said: “Health Secretary Sajid Javid has a historic opportunit­y to show the Government values NHS staff and knows the importance of this pay rise to improving patient care.

“Nursing pay has fallen significan­tly in the last decade – by 15% in real terms. If the Government is serious about filling the tens of thousands of vacant nurse jobs then a significan­t pay rise is needed. It is as crucial to NHS recovery in the coming years as any other piece of investment.

“Low-level awards of a couple of percent would look timid and insult staff when the challenges they face have never been greater.”

Unite national officer for health Colenzo Jarrett-Thorpe said: “If the Pay Review Body is recommendi­ng a 3% pay rise, it is a small step forward on the insulting 1% the Government offered in March. However, this recommenda­tion in no way recognises the 19% drop in real earnings that many NHS workers have endured in the last decade, nor the immense sacrifices that health staff have and are continuing to make as Covid infection rates rapidly rise again.

“It doesn’t match the 4% the Scottish Government offered to NHS workers backdated to December 2020. Three per cent will also do very little to staunch the escalating recruitmen­t and retention crisis and free up resources to tackle the enormous backlog in non-Covid procedures, such as hip replacemen­ts.

“The Government needs to be much more generous than the anticipate­d PRB recommenda­tion – the public will expect it to be. Health trade unions have been calling for an early and significan­t pay rise for more than a year, this announceme­nt is too little and too late.”

A Department of Health and Social Care spokespers­on said: “We are incredibly grateful to all our NHS staff. This year the Government has committed to providing NHS staff with a pay uplift, at a time when uplifts in the wider public sector have been paused.

“In doing so, the Government is acknowledg­ing the extraordin­ary effort of NHS staff through the pandemic. We have received the reports from the independen­t Pay Review Bodies and are now carefully considerin­g their recommenda­tions before responding.”

Unison head of health Sara Gorton said: “It’s in Boris Johnson’s gift to grant staff a fair deal. Yet he’s still making them wait.

“It’s 320 days since Unison wrote to Boris Johnson asking for a £2,000 increase for every NHS worker, but health workers in England, Wales and Northern Ireland still don’t know what they’ll get nearly 11 months on.

In Wales, NHS workers are also waiting to hear of their pay award, depsite Welsh Government assurances it would be announced by the end of June.

But Wales’ Health Minister Eluned Morgan has said she expects the Welsh Government to offer a pay rise to NHS staff above the proposed 1% announced by the UK Government.

Campaigner­s will hand in a petition to Downing Street tomorrow signed by 800,000 people, calling for a 15% pay rise for NHS workers.

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